Human Physiology, 14th edition (2016)

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to human health and physical performance. The scope of top-
ics included in a human physiology course is therefore wide-
ranging, yet each topic must be covered in sufficient detail to
provide a firm basis for future expansion and application.
Human Physiology, fourteenth edition, is written for the
undergraduate introductory human physiology course. Based
on the author’s extensive experience with teaching this course,
the framework of the textbook is designed to provide basic
biology and chemistry (chapters 2–5) before delving into more
complex physiological processes. This approach is appreciated
by both instructors and students; specific references in later
chapters direct readers back to the foundational material as
needed, presenting a self-contained study of human physiology.
In addition to not presupposing student’s preparedness, this
popular textbook is known for its clear and approachable writing
style, detailed realistic art, and unsurpassed clinical information.

Preface


The Cover
William B. Westwood’s cover
illustration of the eye and the
structures and processes required
for vision encompasses the study
of physiology at multiple levels.
The physiology of vision entails
the biophysical processes of light
becoming focused onto and inter-
acting with photoreceptors, the
molecular and cellular constitu-
ents of these receptors that enable
them to respond to light, and neural interactions needed for the
brain to meaningfully interpret this stimulation.
Photoreceptors are located in the part of the eye and brain
called the retina, which is a neural layer at the back of the eye.
The front cover shows light entering the eye and becoming
focused by the lens onto the retina. The outer segments of pho-
toreceptors contain stacks of membranes, shown as purple at
the bottom of the book’s spine, which contain the photorecep-
tor pigment rhodopsin (the green structures within the mem-
branes at the bottom left of the front cover).
The bottom middle of the front cover illustrates a plasma
membrane of a photoreceptor neuron containing ion channels
(pink). In the dark, these channels allow Na^1 ions (pink spheres)
to enter the photoreceptor. Light induces a change in the rhodop-
sin that initiates a signaling pathway (not shown), which leads to
the closing of these channels (shown by the bottom channel). This
indirectly causes the photoreceptors to stimulate other neurons in
the retina (bipolar cells, depicted in red near the bottom of the
front cover), which then stimulate another layer of neurons (gan-
glion cells, depicted green at the bottom of the front cover.).
The axons (nerve fibers) of the ganglion cells gather together
to form the optic nerves, which leave the eye to carry visual infor-
mation to the brain, as shown on the back cover. The visual fields
illustrated as blue and purple circles on the back cover stimulate
different regions of the retina. Because many of the axons in the
optic nerves cross to the opposite side, aspects of the right visual
field are conveyed to the left cerebral cortex and vice versa, as
illustrated by the blue and purple colors of the nerve tracts. Physi-
ological processes continue within the brain, allowing it to create
images that our mind interprets as the reality of the external world.

What Sets This Book Apart?
The study of human physiology provides the scientific founda-
tion for the field of medicine and all other professions related

Acknowledgments


Reviewers
Patti Allen, Dixie State College
Dani Behonick, Canada College
Justin Brown, James Madison University
Michael Burg, San Diego City College
Julia Chang, Mount St. Mary’s College Chalon
Corey Cleland, James Madison University
Linda Collins, University of Tennessee Chattanooga
Maria Elena DeBellard, California State University–Northridge
Andrew Flick, James Madison University
James Hoffmann, Diablo Valley College
Cynthia Kay-Nishiyama, California State University–Northridge
Paul Kingston, San Diego City College
Arnold Kondo, Citrus College
Ann Maliszewski, Cuesta College
Nancy Mann, Cuesta College
Tim Maze, Lander University
Vikki Mccleary, University of North Dakota
Cheryl Neudauer, Minneapolis Community & Technical College
Mark Paternostro, West Virginia University–Morgantown
Erik Schweitzer, Santa Monica Community College
Laura Steele, Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana–Fort Wayne
R. Douglas Watson, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Allison Wilson, Benedictine University

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